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Topic: Ripping music and video from CD and DVD for future LinuxMCE system (Read 2748 times)

I will use a LinuxMCE system in my future house, but that is over a year in the future. However I would like to rip all my movie-dvd's and music cd's to an empty drive that I'm supposed to install in the core later on.

Is there anything in particular I should think about when doing this? Filesystem? Folder structure? Acually having LinuxMCE installed on the drive?

Anything that can help. I'm a newbie :S

As for now I haven't even been able to try LinuxMCE since I only have Mac's in my home.

I would like as high quality as possible, so for the music I'm thinking FLAC.

I will use a LinuxMCE system in my future house, but that is over a year in the future. However I would like to rip all my movie-dvd's and music cd's to an empty drive that I'm supposed to install in the core later on.

Is there anything in particular I should think about when doing this? Filesystem? Folder structure? Acually having LinuxMCE installed on the drive?

Anything that can help. I'm a newbie :S

As for now I haven't even been able to try LinuxMCE since I only have Mac's in my home.

I would like as high quality as possible, so for the music I'm thinking FLAC.

Thank you!

rgds,Christian

You might want to separate media by users. Outside of that it pretty much just picks up and goes.

joshpond: Looks interesting. I will definately take a look at this - What are the major benefits of this compared to other NAS's?

Price, you can add (from memory) 22 hdds plus one parity so you get good storage for your value. (ie RAID 5 has about 33% loss) unRAID only gives 1 hdd loss.The drawback of this is that writes are slow, around 30-40 MB/s but reads are fine (which is what you want for media)You can build from pc parts, even old ones.Cost is pretty good for the amount of storage.Very good community support and forum.

RAID 5 usable sizeParity data uses up the capacity of one drive in the array (this can be seen by comparing it with RAID 4: RAID 5 distributes the parity data across the disks, while RAID 4 centralizes it on one disk, but the amount of parity data is the same). If the drives vary in capacity, the smallest of them sets the limit. Therefore, the usable capacity of a RAID 5 array is , where N is the total number of drives in the array and Smin is the capacity of the smallest drive in the array.

The number of hard disks that can belong to a single array is limited only by the capacity of the storage controller in hardware implementations, or by the OS in software RAID. One caveat is that unlike RAID 1, as the number of disks in an array increases, the chance of data loss due to multiple drive failures is increased. This is because there is a reduced ratio of "losable" drives (the number of drives which may fail before data is lost) to total drives.[citation needed]

From your link. If all 3 disks are the same size you lose one to parity, ie 33%.

If you have more disks, yes you can minimise the unusable disk space, but lose 2 drives and you lose all data as the parity is broken up.

With unRAID lose 2 disks and you lose 2 disk's worth of data.

Granted write performance is pretty average with unRAID but read is fine. I'm not here to sell it, basically what I use. Read the website and the forum for more.

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Isn't it possible to build the LinuxMCE core in that chassi, set up a webmin NAS in it (or is that necessary when using it as core?), and for now only buy a couple of SATA discs to rip to?